Analysis of heart rate and respiratory patterns in sudden infant death syndrome victims and control infants.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Retrospective analyses of patterns of breathing and heart rate variability obtained by visual inspection and spectral analysis of ECG and respiratory activity have provided markers associated with subsequent death in a referred population of infants at high risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Such markers include breathing patterns characterized by excessive apneic pauses and periodic breathing, heart rate spectra characterized by increased low frequency oscillations, and respiratory activity spectra characterized by a widened "bandwidth" during regular breathing. To test whether such measurements could distinguish SIDS cases and randomly selected controls from a population study the data from 10 cases and 100 age-matched control subjects were analyzed blind. The code was disclosed after completion of the analysis. We found that none of the markers served to distinguish the SIDS cases from the controls in the population at large. This observation may indicate important physiological differences between infants destined to die in the referred high risk population and infants who die of SIDS at large. The possible reasons for our inability to identify the group of SIDS in the general population, as compared to the group of deaths in the referred high risk group are: (1) different disease processes in the two groups, (2) difference responses to the same disease process in the two groups, (3) a response reflecting the psychosocial setting of the referred high risk population, (4) methodological differences between this and previous studies. We conclude that these markers are not of value in screening the population at large.